vamp stamp
daily dos
mon 8/17/2009
Listen to Julieta Venegas' remix of "Bestia," a new single by Mexican band Hello Seahorse!
Julieta Venegas "El Presente"
peep this
tue 4/15/2008
Rock idol and accordionist Julieta Venegas returns with her first unplugged album, an acoustic treatment of her pop hits. The collection features guest appearances by Mala Rodríguez, Gustavo Santaolalla, Marissa Monte and Porter's Juan Carlos Son. It also features three new tracks: "Mírame Bien," "Mira La Vida" and "El Presente" (which you can listen to above).
Artist: Julieta Venegas
Song: "El Presente"
Album: Julieta Venegas Unplugged
Label: Sony BMG
Official Julieta Venegas MySpace
don't wait up
daily dos
tue 7/10/2007
"Despabílate," Anita Tijoux's new video, features an appearance by Julieta Venegas. Tijoux appeared on Julieta's "Eres Para Mi," off the album Limón Y Sal. (via musik is life)
Mala Rodriguez “Malamarismo”
discorama
mon 7/9/2007
It's one of the ironies of history that Spain, which gave the world the Spanish language, to say the least, has yet to produce a Spanish-language rapper or reggaetónero on par with Daddy Yankee, Don Omar, Calle 13, Tego Calderón or, for that matter, Ivy Queen.
Maybe it's the funny way the Spanish spit their "jotas" or the sometimes vast cultural distance between Europe and the New World. Or, just maybe, without access to the long, violent history of Spain's outcasts, its gitanos and moros, its economic refugees and political prisons, Americans wouldn't recognize an authentic Spanish voice if they heard it.
Emphasis on "if." Malamarismo is Mala Rodríguez' third album, but since it's nearly impossible to hear her first, the raw and sometimes dazzling Lujo Ibérico (2000) and much of her second record, Alevosía (2003), never made it on the Interwebs, you could say this is her American debut.
It certainly sounds like one. Less present are the minimal, old school beats and monophonic synthesizer basslines, the chiki-wah-wah guitar hooks and mind-numbingly insistent piano lines. In their place are, well, lotsa shiny new things: from the rubbery rhythm of "Caida Libre" to the layered staccato samples in "Memos Tu," from the crystalline, spiraling beats in "Toca Toca" to the stuttering, twisted orchestra on "Enfermo". Even the record's first single, the club banger "Nanai," sprinkles syncopated sticks, bells and metals over the length of the entire song.
While positively future-forward, these accents can get in the way of a good line, as on "Memorias del Futuro," where a strapped up 1-2-3 beat and nasal synth line cut through the vocals like a headache on a sunny day. It's a weird, dizzying effect: unlike other summer blockbusters where the special effects are designed to shine, what makes La Mala Rodríguez a natural star is her voice. She's the reason you buy tickets to the show.
Fortunately for her current and future fans, there's still plenty of La Mala on Malamarismo, even if it's squeezed into fleeting moments. On the standout Toca Toca, her aggressive diction, potent rhymes and sultry southern pronunciation (she drops consonants like strippers drop panties) blend perfectly with the musical base leaving the listener hungry for seconds. The album's closing track, "Déjame Entrá," may start with a drunken sample but it snaps to attention with the Sevillana singsong that makes La Mala as charmed as the words she dedicates to a lover on this shuffling chill-out jam.
Where her previous records were sometimes marred by out-of-wack collaborations with lesser talents, there are two pairings on this collection worthy of the occasion. A minute into the sweet "Tiempo Pa Pensa," Mala deftly drops into an understated flamenco flourish only to suddenly bump into – and yield much of the rest of the song to – Julieta Venegas. On Enfermo, the flow is smoother, as Tego Calderón gracefully shares and even propels the track, trading both verse and chorus duties with a poised Mala.
Our review copy also included a bonus video of Por La Noche off her previous album, a terrific "classic" Mala track that will hopefully point millions towards her back catalog of hits and, perhaps, guarantee their release in the U.S. where their black magic can only do her career good. In the meantime, interested parties would do well to track down and order jaw-droppers like "La Cocinera", "La Niña", "Tengo Un Trato" and "Con Los Ojos De Engaña," which has the added distinction of lyrically foreshadowing her first strike this time around:
Si vas a engañar
mírame con los ojos de engañar
Si vas a matar
mírame con los ojos de matar...
Pa tí na es to, para mí to es naIf you're going to lie,
Look at me with lying eyes
If you're going to kill
Look at me with killer eyes...
For you, nothing is everything, for me everything ain't a thing
Shakira vs. Julieta Venegas
versus
wed 5/23/2007
| name | Shakira Isabel Mebarak Ripoll. | Julieta Venegas Percevault. |
| hometown | Barranquilla, Colombia. | Tijuana, Mexico, born in Long Beach, California. |
| birthdate | February 2, 1977. | November 24, 1970. |
| style | Latin Pop-rock. | Pop-rock en Español. |
| nickname | Shaki. | La Chica del Acordeón. |
| musical influences | Alanis Morissette. | Morrissey. |
| the look | Hip-shaking urban bombshell. | A thinking man's grrrl with Frida Kahlo eyebrows. |
| signature move | Rapid-fire booty shake. | Pushing all the right buttons on her squeeze box. |
| side-projects | Founder of charity organization Fundación Pies Descalzos. | Ghostwriter for Fratta, Sasha Sokol, Tijuana No, Sr. González and Los Tres. |
| marital status | Soon to be married to longtime boyfriend Antonio De La Rúa. | Divorced from Álvaro Henriquez of Los Tres. Ex-boyfriends include Mastretta and Joselo. |
| most recent release | Beautiful Liar (with Beyoncé). | Limón y Sal. |
| los Grammis | 2003 Grammy Award for Best Latin Rock/Alternative Album. | 2006 Latin Grammy Award for Best Alternative Music Album. |
| the critics | Allmusic.com says: "Latin pop's biggest female crossover artist since Jennifer Lopez broke down the doors to English-language success." | Allmusic.com says: "One of the most gifted and accomplished – and certainly one of the most respected – artists in the Latin music sphere." |
| webprops | 274,330 friends on MySpace. | 32,216 friends on MySpace. |
| best video moment | Gets thrown in the slammer while hanging out with street performers. | Leaves her boo and flies off in a hot air balloon. |
hot off the comal
daily dos
thu 4/26/2007
South of the Border: Julieta Venegas – a videography by music blog Obtusity.
Coti
whodat
fri 4/6/2007
Julieta Venegas and Paulina Rubio owe Coti Sorokin – big time. Sorokin, one of Latin America’s most influential pop songwriters, has helped Venegas and Rubio write some of their greatest hits, Andar Conmigo and Te Quise Tanto, respectively. But the young Argentino is not just penning hit tracks for others, he's in the midst of becoming a pop star himself.
In the late '90s, Coti began rocking with Luz Mala in his native Rosario, Argentina. He then moved to Buenos Aires with the intention of starting a solo career, but instead took up writing for artists like Andrés Calamaro, Fito Páez, Alejandro Lerner, Diego Torres and Charly García.
A decade later, Coti would finally launch his solo career from Spain, with a strong self-titled debut. The buzz generated by life-affirming songs like Antes Que Ver el Sol and "Que La Vida" no doubt helped Coti secure the opening slot for Shakira’s visit to Madrid in 2003. A second album, Canciones Para Llevar, followed in 2004.
But it was Coti's third outing, the 2005 live album Esta Mañana y Otros Cuentos, that perked up ears in Latin America. Among the highlights of the album is Nada Fue Un Error, a upbeat pop number – featuring none other than Julieta Venegas and Paulina Rubio. The track became an enormous hit that has since become his signature song.
Gatos y Palomas, Coti’s fourth album, was released this week via Universal. On Gatos, Coti shuffles between Tom Petty and Robbie Williams, creating simple songs that showcase a more introspective and socially conscious outlook. The album's first single, the ranchera-influenced Canción de Adiós (Goodbye Song) is already making waves on Spanish radio across the U.S.
home alone
daily dos
thu 3/8/2007
Julieta Venegas releases her autobiography: De Mis Pasos. Conversaciones con Julieta Venegas – now in bookstores.
